NEWS UPDATE

Summary of H. Res. 895: Establishing within the House of Representatives an Office of Congressional Ethics

March 10, 2008

Outline of H.Res. 895

Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE)

Independent office within the House.

Composed of 6 Board members, jointly appointed by the Speaker and Minority
Leader. (Speaker nominates three subject to concurrence of Minority Leader; Minority Leader nominates three subject to concurrence of Speaker.) Current Members of the House, federal employees, and lobbyists are not eligible.

Term of 4 years, one reappointment possible. Removal only with approval of both the Speaker and Minority Leader acting jointly.

3 Board members must vote affirmatively to move forward to second-phase review. Otherwise, the preliminary review is terminated and no publication is required.

A second-phase review is 45 calendar or 5 legislative days, whichever is longer, with one extension of 14 calendar days possible.

All matters subject to a second-phase review must be referred to Ethics Committee for its review.

Referrals to Ethics Committee will be accompanied by two documents: (1) a Report which recommends dismissal, further inquiry, or states that the Board vote was a tie, and (2) Findings of fact. Neither document shall contain conclusions regarding the validity of the allegations or the guilt or innocence of the person subject to the review  such matters are the sole purview of the Ethics Committee.

Ethics Committee

Committee has 45 calendar or 5 legislative days from date of referral to review the matter, whichever is longer. One extension of 45 calendar or 5 legislative days is available.

On most matters, at the end of the time period, the Ethics Committee must issue commentary on status, along with the Report and Findings of the Board. On matters both the Board and Ethics Committee agree should be dismissed, no publication is required. If the Ethics Committee defers its review of a matter at the request of an appropriate law enforcement or regulatory authority (e.g., Justice Dept.), an announcement of such deferral is required.

If the Ethics Committee establishes an investigative subcommittee, only that fact is publicized. If no conclusion after one year, the Board's Report is published. Board Findings are published at close of that Congress.

If the Ethics Committee requests that the Board refers a matter prior to completion of its review, it is still subject to the time limits and reporting requirements set
forth above.